From Publishers Weekly
Books about bright young women learning the ropes of glamorous careers under corrosively evil bosses are catnip to a generation of readers, so this West Coast version of
The Devil Wears Prada fills a niche, with brio. Elizabeth Miller gives up an idealistic job as a Washington senator's aide to join the Agency, a super-powerful Hollywood outfit that represents stars, producers and directors. The young L.A. newcomer may not be as clearheaded and full of self-knowledge as she's intended to be (she does jump topless into the agency head's pool with a lecherous producer), but she's a paragon of virtue compared to her boss, Scott Wagner, who is loutish, sex-obsessed, terminally addicted to any abusable substance, lazy and overbearing. Despite her misgivings and scads of unjustified abuse, Elizabeth throws herself into Xeroxing and party planning ("Dancers from Crazy Girls on La Brea. Though only small-nippled girls") and is rewarded by brushes with a parade of A-list personalities (Cameron, Jennifer, George, Harvey). The insider peeks at Tinseltown are more engrossing than the plot, but a hot script and backroom Agency dealings keep the pages turning. Contrivances aboundâ"Elizabeth keeps meeting key figures at just the right momentâ"and the jokes often fall flat. The book undoes itself by offering as chapter headings some of the great dialogue from old movies ("What's the going price on integrity this week?"), and there's simply no comparison between what those old scriptwriters and these joint authors offer up. Still, this is a fast, fun, trashy read.
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
From Booklist
Jumping on the gravy train that was started by such books as
The Nanny Diaries (2002) and
The Devil Wears Prada [BKL Ap 1 03], this novel by two Hollywood insiders tells the story of a smart young girl caught up in the loathsome world of a Hollywood power agent. Elizabeth Miller, a former congressional intern, has taken a job at "The Agency." Her first task should be a warning of what she's in for--removing all the colored thumbtacks from the office because the boss likes only beige ones. Her main job is to serve as second assistant to Hollywood player Scott. He is the current hot agent, and all the biggest stars flock to him; unfortunately, he is also drug-addicted and addle-brained. During the course of the story, Elizabeth encounters all the things the reader knows she will: megalomaniacal, back-stabbing coworkers; drugs; plastic surgery; and obscene consumerism as well as barely disguised celebrities and other Hollywood folks, all of whom behave badly. While eminently readable, chatty, engaging, and sometimes quite funny, this book doesn't really tell us anything we don't know or haven't suspected about Hollywood and its citizens. Librarians might want to purchase a few copies though; the cult of celebrity worship guarantees a lot of press for this one.
Kathleen HughesCopyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved